Monday, April 22, 2019

energy - What really happens atomically in an explosion?


Let's say a room is filled with butane, I then throw a cigarette into the room. What happens to the atoms/molecules of the butane when they are in contact with the heat from the cigarette?



Answer



The combustion of alkanes like butane is fearsomely complicated involving dozens of transient compounds and hundreds of different reaction. If you have a few spare hours there is a dissertation that presents a nice summary of the process here (this is a 1MB PDF).


A butane molecule is pretty stable and doesn't react with oxygen on contact so you need some way to get the reaction going. Typically the reaction is started by the generation of free radicals. These will react with stable molecules to split them up and generate more free radicals so in effect we have a chain reaction.


So the ignition process is basically the generation of free radicals, and that's what the lit cigarette does. The heat of the burning tobacco generates free radicals that then start the butane oxygen reaction. You can also generate free radicals in lots of other ways e.g. using shock, from an electric spark, or by using a suitable catalyst such as the catalytic convertor on your car exhaust.


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